He said he wanted to be an astronaut when he grew up, but not just any astronaut.

“I want to be the first man on Mars,” he said with a big smile.

His dad made certain they got a spot where they could watch.

“I really wanted him to see this because this is what I really hope he achieves because it’s something he’s so passionate about,” Ted Pankiewicz said. “I just love the fact that he’s gotten so focused on something like this because it’s something so important.”

Several thousand space-crazed spectators packed into Jetty Park, roughly five miles south of the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center, to watch the historic event—considered a major first step to sending humans to Mars.

"There are so many things we can learn by going further out,” Ted Pankiewicz said.

“It’s just the biggest, baddest rocket in the world,” Ryan McKay, who traveled from Colorado, added.

The crowd included people from across the state, the country and even beyond, all trying to get a glimpse of the galactic possibilities.

“Since I was a kid, it was a dream to see that,” said Yves Dufour, who drove all the way from Montreal with a friend to photograph the rocket.

The day, however, was not without delays — more than two hours when all was said and done.